biblically rich girl ✧
Lesson ScriptModule 1

LESSON 1.1: BUSINESS AS MINISTRY: THE GREAT COMMISSION & THE FIRST COMMANDMENT

[VIDEO START]

Hey girl, welcome to the Digital Success Blueprint. I am so, so excited that you’re here. Seriously. Take a deep breath. You made it. You’re here for a reason. This isn’t just another course; this is an anointing. This is an activation. This is the moment where you stop being an aspiring entrepreneur and you start becoming the CEO of your own biblically rich, wildly successful digital product business.

Before we dive into the nitty-gritty of branding, content, and sales, we need to lay the foundation. And I mean the real foundation. Not just business principles, but spiritual principles. Because your business is not separate from your faith; it’s an extension of it. It’s a vehicle for it.

So, let’s talk about business as ministry. I know, I know. For some of you, that might sound a little… heavy. Like, “Woah, I just wanted to make some money online, not become a missionary.” But I want you to reframe that. What if I told you that building a profitable business is one of the most spiritual things you can do? What if I told you that your desire to create and sell is actually a divine calling?

[DOUBLE-CLICK MOMENT]

I remember when I first started my journey. I was a day trader, and my whole world was about numbers, charts, and making a profit. I was good at it, but there was always this nagging feeling that something was missing. I was making money, but was I making a difference? I felt this pull towards something more, something that felt more like… worship. And I had this lightbulb moment where I realized that the skills I was using to trade—the discipline, the strategy, the emotional detachment—were the exact same skills I needed to build a business that could actually change people’s lives. It wasn’t about leaving the marketplace; it was about redeeming it.

That’s what we’re going to do here. We’re going to redeem the idea of business. We’re going to take it back to its original design. And that starts with the two most important commandments. You know them. Love God, and love your neighbor as yourself. That’s it. That’s the whole business plan.

I want you to get this deep in your spirit: Business is love in action. It’s the First Commandment made visible. When you create a digital product that solves a problem for someone, that makes their life easier, that brings them joy or clarity or transformation—you are loving your neighbor. You are packaging your God-given gifts and offering them as an act of service. The money you receive? That’s just the resource that love generates. It’s the natural byproduct of you providing massive value to a massive number of people.

Think about it. The greatest salesman on earth was Jesus himself. How did he market the kingdom? Through teaching and through demonstration. He didn’t just talk about love; he showed it. He healed the sick, he fed the hungry, he washed feet. Your business is your demonstration. Your content, your products, your brand—it’s all you, showing your light. It’s you, in your own unique way, fulfilling the Great Commission.

I want you to let that sink in. Your Instagram feed? That’s a mission field. Your email list? That’s a congregation. Your digital product? That’s a discipleship tool. When you shift your perspective and see your business as a ministry, everything changes. The pressure to perform is replaced by a passion to serve. The fear of failure is replaced by a faith in your calling.

Because here’s the truth: you were created to create. You were designed to multiply. The very first commandment God gave to humanity was to be fruitful and multiply. That wasn’t just about having babies. It was about taking everything He’s placed inside of you—your talents, your ideas, your passions—and multiplying them in the world. Entrepreneurship is a direct obedience to that command.

So, your first assignment in this journey is to get crystal clear on your “why.” Not just your financial why, but your ministry why. What is the heart behind your business? Who are you called to serve? What transformation are you called to facilitate? This is about writing a mission statement for your business that frames it as an act of love and service. This is your anchor. This is the thing you’ll come back to when you feel discouraged or overwhelmed. This is your declaration that your business is bigger than you. It’s a partnership with God. It’s a commissioned enterprise.

[VIDEO END]